Spasm

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Muscle spasm
ICD-10 R25.2
ICD-9 728.85
MeSH D013035

A spasm is a sudden, involuntary contraction of a muscle, a group of muscles,[1] or a hollow organ, or a similarly sudden contraction of an orifice. It is sometimes accompanied by a sudden burst of pain, but is usually harmless and ceases after a few minutes. Spasmodic muscle contraction may also be due to a large number of medical conditions, including the dystonias.

“Hypertonic muscle spasm”, also known as hypertonus, means “too much muscle tone”, and is unfortunately very common. [Muscle tone is the residual tension in a resting muscle – the amount of contraction that remains when a muscle is not actively working.] Hypertonus is beyond conscious control, it does not always produce direct awareness of its presence, and it surfaces in many ways not normally associated with muscle. What may appear as skeletal, circulatory, nerve, or inflammatory distress usually begins with hypertonic muscle spasm, a condition caused by the interruption of nerve feedback loops between muscle and brain.

We tend to think of “spasm” as a cramp or tic, usually temporary and caused by lack of circulation. But true hypertonic spasm is caused by malfunctioning feedback nerves, is much more serious, and is permanent unless treated. Simply put, the hypertonic muscle is muscle tone run amok – the muscles are unable to relax.

By extension, a spasm is a temporary burst of energy, activity, emotion, stress, or anxiety.

A subtype of spasms is colic, an episodic pain due to spasms of smooth muscle in a particular organ (e.g. the bile duct). A characteristic of colic is the sensation of having to move about, and the pain may induce nausea or vomiting if severe. Series of spasms or permanent spasms are called a spasmism.

In very severe cases, the spasm can induce muscular contractions that are more forceful than the sufferer could generate under normal circumstances. This can lead to torn tendons and ligaments.

Hysterical strength is argued to be a type of spasm induced by the brain under extreme circumstances.


Spasms can be caused by insufficient hydration, muscle overload or absence of some minerals (such as magnesium).

See also

Notes

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External links


bs:Mišićni spazam

cs:Křeč de:Krampf es:Espasmo muscular fa:تنجش fr:Spasme it:Spasmo lt:Spazmas ja:痙攣 pl:Kurcz pt:Espasmo ru:Спазм sr:Мишићни спазам fi:Spasmi sv:Spasm tl:Pasma

uk:Спазм
  1. spasm at Dorland's Medical Dictionary